It is known since the time of testing histamine on pieces of guinea pig's jejunum that histamine receptors can develop insensitivity. The aim was to find evidence for desensitization of histamine H1 receptors in the human skin in vivo and, if found, to study the time for such receptors to regain normal sensitivity. A skin prick test with histamine (10mgmL-1 ) was set in areas where a large histamine wheal was evoked 2, 6, 18, 24 or 72hours earlier. A skin prick test with histamine (10mgmL-1 ) was also set in an area where an allergen wheal was evoked 2 or 6hours earlier. Heights, diameters and areas were measured on photographs of side views of plaster casts of the evoked skin elevations. Histamine wheals, called test wheals, in areas where large histamine wheals were evoked 2, 6 or 18hours earlier, were smaller than histamine wheals, called initial wheals, in earlier non-stimulated areas. Test wheals from the 18hours experiment were smaller than test wheals from the 72hours experiment. Test wheals evoked in areas where allergen wheals were evoked 2 or 6hours earlier were smaller than corresponding initial wheals. Histamine-evoked wheals and IgE-mediated allergic wheals reduce the sensitivity of histamine H1 receptors in the human skin. It takes between 18 and 72hours to restore the sensitivity. Similarities between the development of histamine wheals in the human skin and histaminergic migraine with aura are discussed.